BearFan PHX Posted yesterday at 04:08 AM Report Share Posted yesterday at 04:08 AM I heard Adam Jahns on Silvy and Waddle today talking about how Ben Johnson has been vocal and exacting on the field with the team. If you didn't hear it, he recounted a story where Caleb got through 5 reads, and finally dumped it off to Roschon Johnson on a swing pass, and he got a first down, maybe closer to 15 years on the play. But Johnson wasn't happy. He watched Caleb go through the progression, and yelled "FASTER" at Caleb in the middle of the rep. He felt one of the earlier reads was open for a better outcome, and Caleb was too slow getting to him, and he ended up covered. Gentlemen, THIS is what we've been waiting for. More than anything else. A coach who demands rhythm. Caleb is good enough to get the ball to outlet receivers and make first downs on talent, but running an offense in rhythm against NFL defenses is so hard for any quarterback. Having coaches that demand that the QB does it correctly what it's ALL about. Xs and Os offensive genius? Cool. But unless it gets executed at tempo it's meaningless, and devolves into sandlot football. And it's kinda cool to have a guy in Caleb that can beat NFL defenses at sandlot football - that's gonna be good for a lot of amazing pays when things break down. But imagine something we havent seen in Chicago: an NFL offense that operates in rhythm. A play caller who calls plays in a rhythm, and gives looks to set up defenses. Are we going to have a modern football offense? With competence?! Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
AZ54 Posted yesterday at 05:33 AM Report Share Posted yesterday at 05:33 AM I watched all the press conferences. Again the keyword from the players is “Details”. These coaches demand everything be done right. A reporter asked Ben where that focus comes from. Is it innate to who he is or something he learned from other coaches. His answer: It’s more about learning from where I’ve seen other coaches fail and not wanting to make those same mistakes. He added that he’s seen more bad football than good. Ben Johnson is not one of these guys from a “coaching tree”. He’s building his own tree. other observations: YouTuber Matty Dubs said something interesting after the first OTA practice: During a simple Handoff drill rotating QBs and RBs Caleb was first in line with Swift. Bagent/Roschon, Keenum/Homer, Reed/Wheeler then Caleb/ Monangai He said the coaches will line them up so the starting QB gets the most reps with the top two RBs. I thought that sounds logical but it’s also the first practice. Now we’re in minicamp and that same drill had the same lineup. Add in all the chatter about Monangai looking good on the last drive today not just running but also catching passes. Even on drills Monangai catches cleanly with his hands. I’m thinking we’ve got our #2 RB Trapilo continues to impress. I expect he’ll be with the first team to start training camp. Ben Johnson said for the LT it’s all about having the best pass blocking anything they get from that player in run blocking is a bonus. Kiran is struggling. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
BearFan PHX Posted yesterday at 05:38 AM Author Report Share Posted yesterday at 05:38 AM 9 minutes ago, AZ54 said: I watched all the press conferences. Again the keyword from the players is “Details”. These coaches demand everything be done right. A reporter asked Ben where that focus comes from. Is it innate to who he is or something he learned from other coaches. His answer: It’s more about learning from where I’ve seen other coaches fail and not wanting to make those same mistakes. He added that he’s seen more bad football than good. Ben Johnson is not one of these guys from a “coaching tree”. He’s building his own tree. other observations: YouTuber Matty Dubs said something interesting after the first OTA practice: During a simple Handoff drill rotating QBs and RBs Caleb was first in line with Swift. Bagent/Roschon, Keenum/Homer, Reed/Wheeler then Caleb/ Monangai He said the coaches will line them up so the starting QB gets the most reps with the top two RBs. I thought that sends logical but it’s also the first practice. Now we’re in minicamp and that same drill had the same lineup. Add in all the chatter about Monangai looking good on the last drive today not just running but also catching passes. Even on drills Monangai catches cleanly with his hands I’m thinking we’ve got our #2 RB Trapilo continues to impress. I expect he’ll be with the first team to start training camp. Ben Johnson said for the LT it’s all about having the best pass blocking anything they get from that player in run blocking is a bonus. Yeah, he's not a go along with the crowd guy, he sees what he sees and calls it like it is - kind of like we do on this board. The truth is the truth! I noticed the Caleb getting his second rotation with Monangi too as soon as film came out. it sure does sound ike they like him for RB2. Who knows, maybe they want him for RB1, and Johnson for RB2. If Monangai and Trapilo are successful, and Trapilo starts, then all the LTs and HBs we missed mean nothing. That would be an amazing achievement by the scouting department. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Stinger226 Posted yesterday at 11:00 AM Report Share Posted yesterday at 11:00 AM Braxton cant practice yet but he is attending. I think because of 3 yrs of starting at LT, he will be running with the first team when ready. As much as he has to improve, he will get to show if he has progressed. I suspect why Trapilo looks good because he is learning the playbook and moves well. When the pads go on the truth starts. I hope he does well. It seems obvious that Kiran has a long way to go , essentially this is his rookie year as far as practicing. I think when its said and done, whoever plays LT, we will be fine there. Playing next to Thuney has to help all of them. Monangai gets rave reviews by whoever you talk to. I think he has taken away the cry (we need to add a RB). I think he will shine once we start hitting, he has a great YAC stat and is physical. Plus, has never fumbled. Ben stated that it will probably be our biweek before we get the offense running smooth. That does not mean we cant win a couple of our first 4 games. We will run the ball and play good defense that will give us a chance. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
ASHKUM BEAR Posted 21 hours ago Report Share Posted 21 hours ago 4 hours ago, Stinger226 said: Braxton cant practice yet but he is attending. I think because of 3 yrs of starting at LT, he will be running with the first team when ready. As much as he has to improve, he will get to show if he has progressed. I suspect why Trapilo looks good because he is learning the playbook and moves well. When the pads go on the truth starts. I hope he does well. It seems obvious that Kiran has a long way to go , essentially this is his rookie year as far as practicing. I think when its said and done, whoever plays LT, we will be fine there. Playing next to Thuney has to help all of them. I think the Bears will give Trapilo every opportunity to start if he is equal or close to Braxtons performance. The faster they get Trapilo into the lineup the more he can learn and develop and the better off the Bears will be. The best case is if a team needs a LT before the trade deadline and makes an offer with a 2nd or a 3rd. Then again, depth is important if Kiran cannot elevate his game. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Stinger226 Posted 20 hours ago Report Share Posted 20 hours ago I think Trapilo is the future but Braxton having 3 yrs of starter experience at least give him the spot until Kiran or Ozzy take it away. BJ says all spots are open but a rookie still has a lot ot learn , he has to prove himself having been a RT for the last two yrs. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
ASHKUM BEAR Posted 20 hours ago Report Share Posted 20 hours ago 16 minutes ago, Stinger226 said: I think Trapilo is the future but Braxton having 3 yrs of starter experience at least give him the spot until Kiran or Ozzy take it away. BJ says all spots are open but a rookie still has a lot ot learn , he has to prove himself having been a RT for the last two yrs. Trapilo is currently taking the spot and he will continue early in training camp since Braxton will be limited. Braxton has a lot of uphill work to do just to get to where he was before injury, let alone show he improved where he struggled. If Trapilo struggles when they start hitting, then I can see them going back to Braxton. The odds for Braxton are slim, hope he overcomes them, but my money is on the rookie being developed on the field so there are no questions if he can or not come offseason. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Stinger226 Posted 14 hours ago Report Share Posted 14 hours ago BJ was talking about 4 players that stuck out during OTAs. Surprized seeing Dom on that list. Maybe we do have 4 DEs on the field. Dom Robinson/DE Ruben Hyppolite/TE Joel Wilson/TE Kyle Monangai/RB Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Mongo3451 Posted 13 hours ago Report Share Posted 13 hours ago 19 hours ago, BearFan PHX said: Caleb is good enough to get the ball to outlet receivers and make first downs on talent, but running an offense in rhythm against NFL defenses is so hard for any quarterback. Rhythm and the ability to see it before it happens is everything for a QB. Cutler, Trubisky and Fields didn't have either. There's hope for Caleb to have one or both of those traits. If not, see ya... Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
BearFan PHX Posted 12 hours ago Author Report Share Posted 12 hours ago 26 minutes ago, Mongo3451 said: Rhythm and the ability to see it before it happens is everything for a QB. Cutler, Trubisky and Fields didn't have either. There's hope for Caleb to have one or both of those traits. If not, see ya... agree! and having Ben Johnson teach it probably gives Caleb the best chance he could ever have. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
DABEARSDABOMB Posted 6 hours ago Report Share Posted 6 hours ago 6 hours ago, BearFan PHX said: agree! and having Ben Johnson teach it probably gives Caleb the best chance he could ever have. He is setting a whole nother standard and really kind of showing Caleb and rest of the team - they got a lot to work on to get to level needed - I LOVE it!!! Dude just seems to be wired different. I hope Caleb is there next week for the rookie and younger player OTA and than in his month off basically is full bore working on all the things BJ pressed him on these past few weeks. We got to see that passion burn for Caleb to push himself cause it’s clear he has a ways to go (and he was NOT pushed hard enough last year - that is on him just as much as coaching staff - but we basically wasted a chunk of last year cause I think he missed a whole year of being pushed to grow and see what the standard really looks like). Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
BearFan PHX Posted 4 hours ago Author Report Share Posted 4 hours ago 2 hours ago, DABEARSDABOMB said: He is setting a whole nother standard and really kind of showing Caleb and rest of the team - they got a lot to work on to get to level needed - I LOVE it!!! Dude just seems to be wired different. I hope Caleb is there next week for the rookie and younger player OTA and than in his month off basically is full bore working on all the things BJ pressed him on these past few weeks. We got to see that passion burn for Caleb to push himself cause it’s clear he has a ways to go (and he was NOT pushed hard enough last year - that is on him just as much as coaching staff - but we basically wasted a chunk of last year cause I think he missed a whole year of being pushed to grow and see what the standard really looks like). well the first step is to understand what it should look like, and it seems like we've had a bunch of coaches who don't. It's kind of shocking, but it feels like a lot of coaches in the NFL really dont understand the timing of an NFL offense. I dont know why that is, maybe they understand it in some way, a book way, but they clearly dont have the ability to get a team playing that way. I think Johnson has a clear picture about what he wants to to look like, and that is really half the battle. To know what you want, and then demand it of a pretty good roster. Teams like the Rams, last years' Lions, the Eagles, the Chiefs and a few others must just laugh at the rest of the league for being so awful. I need to see it on the field, but i am so hopeful now. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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